Methods for Control Signaling for Wireless Systems

ABSTRACT

To effectively and efficiently provide control information, a broadcast pointer channel (BPCH) may be used to identify the type and perhaps relative location of control information that is being provided in a given frame structure, such as a sub-frame, frame, or superframe. A sub-frame (or like framing entity, such a frame or superframe) may have a BPCH and a corresponding system control information segment in which control information may reside. The system control information segment may have any number of control information blocks, wherein each control information block that is present may correspond to a particular type of control information. The BPCH is used to identify the type of control information that is present in a corresponding system control information segment, and if needed or desired, the relative locations of the various control information.

PRIORITY CLAIM

This application is a continuation of and claims the benefit of priority from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/921,672, entitled “Methods for Control Signaling for Wireless Systems” and filed on Sep. 9, 2010, which is a National Stage of and claims the benefit of priority from International Application No. PCT/IB2009/000476, entitled “Methods for Control Signaling for Wireless Systems” and filed on Mar. 10, 2009, which claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/035,363, filed on Mar. 10, 2008, all of which are fully incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.

BACKGROUND

1. Field of the Application

This disclosure relates to methods for control signaling for wireless systems.

2. Background of the Disclosure

In most wireless communication systems, one or more base stations facilitate wireless communications with any number of mobile stations through a wireless interface. A significant amount of information must be exchanged between the base stations and the various mobile stations to enable communications there between. This information is generally defined as control information. An exemplary wireless communication system is defined by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 802.16 standards as set forth by the Broadband Wireless Access Working Group for Wireless Metropolitan Area Networks (MAN). The IEEE 802.16 standard is commonly referred to as WiMAX, which stands for Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access.

The system requirements for the IEEE 802.16 standard are set forth in the IEEE 802.16m standards, and like many other wireless communication systems, much of the control information that is used for system access, the transmission and reception of traffic packets, and handovers from one base station to the next, is often transmitted and retransmitted ad nauseum, regardless of whether the mobile stations actually need to receive the information. In many instances, the mobile stations are in sleep or idle modes, or already have received and stored the control information. As such, the excessive retransmission of control information that is either not needed by the mobile stations or has already been received by the mobile stations significantly increases control overhead, wastes communication resources, and harms power efficiencies due to the mobile stations having to remain awake to receive and process control information that is either not necessary or is already available.

Accordingly, there is a need for a technique to more efficiently disseminate control information to mobile stations in wireless communication environments, including those defined by the IEEE 802.16 standards and others, in an effective and efficient manner. There is a further need for a technique to ensure that the mobile stations efficiently obtain control information as necessary while reducing the need to receive and process control information that has already been received or is not relevant for operation.

SUMMARY

To effectively and efficiently provide control information, a broadcast pointer channel (BPCH) may be used to identify the type and perhaps relative location of control information that is being provided in a given frame structure, such as a sub-frame, frame, or superframe. A sub-frame (or like framing entity, such a frame or superframe) may have a BPCH and a corresponding system control information segment in which control information may reside. The system control information segment may have any number of control information blocks, wherein each control information block that is present may correspond to a particular type of control information. The BPCH is used to identify the type of control information that is present in a corresponding system control information segment, and if needed or desired, the relative locations of the various control information.

For example, the BPCH may include presence flags for the different types of control information wherein the presence flags are set according to the presence or absence of corresponding control information in the system control information segment. If the system control information segment for a frame includes certain control information in corresponding control information blocks, the BPCH may have flags that correspond to this control information set to indicate the presence of such information, while other flags that correspond to other types of control information are set to indicate the absence of other control information types. The BPCH may also provide the location, length, or the like of the corresponding control information blocks within the system control information segment, such that the mobile station can determine the precise location of the control information in the system control information segment. Each control information block may correspond to a different type of control information or a group of control information types.

Mobile stations can quickly and efficiently determine what control information is present in a sub-frame, whether the control information that is present is relevant, as well as the location of any or all of the control information in the sub-frame. As such, the mobile station can avoid decoding control information that is not relevant. In practice, this means that the mobile station can quickly assess the need to decode the remainder of a sub-frame or at least the portion of the sub-frame that relates to control information once it has determined whether the sub-frame contains relevant control information.

Those skilled in the art will appreciate the scope of the present invention and realize additional aspects thereof after reading the following detailed description in association with the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The accompanying drawings incorporated in and forming a part of this specification illustrate several aspects of the invention, and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the invention.

FIG. 1 is a block representation of a communication environment according to one embodiment of the disclosure.

FIG. 2 is a block representation of a base station according to one embodiment of the disclosure.

FIG. 3 is a block representation of a mobile station according to one embodiment of the disclosure.

FIGS. 4A and 4B represent sub-frame configurations according to one embodiment of the disclosure.

FIGS. 5A and 5B illustrate sub-frame configurations according to a second embodiment of the disclosure.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The embodiments set forth below represent the necessary information to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention and illustrate the best mode of practicing the invention. Upon reading the following description in light of the accompanying drawings, those skilled in the art will understand the concepts of the invention and will recognize applications of these concepts not particularly addressed herein. It should be understood that these concepts and applications fall within the scope of the disclosure and the accompanying claims.

Prior to delving into the details of the present invention, an overview of an exemplary communication environment in which the present invention may be employed is described. With particular reference to FIG. 1, a portion of a cellular network is depicted wherein a base station controller (BSC) 10 serves a plurality of cells 12. Each cell 12 represents the primary coverage area of a particular base station (BS) 14 that is operating under the control of the BSC 10. The base stations 14 are capable of facilitating bi-directional communications through any number of communication technologies with mobile stations (MS) 16 that are within communication range of the base stations 14, and thus within a corresponding cell 12. Communications throughout the cellular network may support voice, data, and media communications.

With particular reference to FIG. 2, a base station 14 configured according to one embodiment of the disclosure is illustrated. Notably, the base station 14 may support any type of wireless communication technology, such as traditional cellular technologies employing orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA), code division multiple access (CDMA), and time division multiple access (TDMA), and local wireless technologies. Although not limited thereto, the concepts of the present invention are applicable to the IEEE 802.16 standards as set forth by the Broadband Wireless Access Working Group for Wireless Metropolitan Area Networks (MAN), and in particular to the System Requirements for the IEEE 802.16 standards as set forth in section the IEEE 802.16m. This family of standards is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Notably, the technology defined by the IEEE 802.16 family of standards is often referred to as WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access).

Accordingly, the base station 14 may act as any wireless access point that supports wireless communications. The base station 14 will preferably be able to support unicast, multicast, and broadcast communications and effect the requisite control signaling to enable and control the same. The base station 14 generally includes a control system 20, a baseband processor 22, transmit circuitry 24, receive circuitry 26, one more antennas 28, and a network interface 30. The receive circuitry 26 receives radio frequency signals bearing information from one or more remote transmitters provided by mobile stations 16. Preferably, a low noise amplifier and a filter (not shown) cooperate to amplify and remove broadband interference from the signal for processing. Downconversion and digitization circuitry (not shown) will then downconvert the filtered, received signal to an intermediate or baseband frequency signal, which is then digitized into one or more digital streams.

The baseband processor 22 processes the digitized received signal to extract the information or data bits conveyed in the received signal. This processing typically comprises demodulation, decoding, and error correction operations. As such, the baseband processor 22 is generally implemented in one or more digital signal processors (DSPs). The received information is then sent toward the core network via the network interface 30 or transmitted toward another mobile station 16 serviced by the base station 14. The network interface 30 will typically interact with the core network via the base station controller 10.

On the transmit side, the baseband processor 22 receives digitized data, which may represent voice, data, or control information, from the network interface 30 under the control of the control system 20. The baseband processor encodes the data for transmission. The encoded data is output to the transmit circuitry 24, where it is used by a modulator to modulate a carrier signal that is at a desired transmit frequency or frequencies. A power amplifier (not shown) will amplify the modulated carrier signal to a level appropriate for transmission, and deliver the modulated carrier signal to one or more of the antennas 28 through a matching network.

With reference to FIG. 3, a mobile station 16 configured according to one embodiment of the disclosure is illustrated. The mobile station 16 will support a communication technology that is compatible with the base stations 14. The mobile station 16 will include a control system 32, a baseband processor 34, transmit circuitry 36, receive circuitry 38, one or more antennas 40, and user interface circuitry 42. The control system 32 will have memory 44 for storing the requisite software and data required for operation. The receive circuitry 38 receives radio frequency signals bearing information from one or more remote transmitters provided by base stations 14. Preferably, a low noise amplifier and a filter (not shown) cooperate to amplify and remove broadband interference from the signal for processing. Downconversion and digitization circuitry (not shown) will then downconvert the filtered, received signal to an intermediate or baseband frequency signal, which is then digitized into one or more digital streams. The baseband processor 34 processes the digitized received signal to extract the information or data bits conveyed in the received signal. This processing typically comprises demodulation, decoding, and error correction operations. The baseband processor 34 is generally implemented in one or more digital signal processors (DSPs).

For transmission, the baseband processor 34 receives digitized data, which may represent voice, data, media, or control information, from the control system 32, which the baseband processor 34 encodes for transmission. The encoded data is output to the transmit circuitry 36, where it is used by a modulator to modulate a carrier signal that is at a desired transmit frequency or frequencies. A power amplifier (not shown) will amplify the modulated carrier signal to a level appropriate for transmission, and deliver the modulated carrier signal to the one or more antennas 40 through a matching network. Various modulation and processing techniques available to those skilled in the art are applicable to the present invention.

Disclosed herein are various techniques to enhance the control signaling that necessarily occurs between the base stations 14 and the mobile stations 16 to support overall system operation. These techniques alone or in combination may reduce control overhead, save power, reduce processing requirements in the mobile stations 16 and base stations 14, allow faster network entry, save network resources, or any combination thereof. The control signaling allows the base stations 14 and the mobile stations 16 to communicate with each other to exchange important information and operational instructions, which are referred to as control information. Since the base station 14 is generally in control of communications, a large portion of the control information is disseminated by the base stations 14 to the mobile stations 16. The control information may be used to control system access, the transmission and reception of traffic packets, handovers, and the like.

Since the control information is varied in nature, different types of control information have different characteristics. For instance, different types of control information may vary in terms of frequency of change, whether it is unicast, multicast, or broadcast, how robust it needs to be, its importance to system access, and the like. Accordingly, different types of control information can be treated differently. The following description categorizes various types of control information, and based on how the information is categorized, effects delivery of the control information accordingly.

To provide perspective and highlight the inefficiencies of the current state of the art, reference is made to the scheduling control and system information is currently provided in the IEEE 802.16e standard. According to the IEEE 802.16e standard, scheduling information is sent in MAP messages, while system information is sent in separate uplink or downlink channels. In addition, neighboring base station information and paging information are broadcast in yet separate messages. Much, if not most, of this information is periodically retransmitted regardless of whether it actually needs to be. For example, some of the information provided in the MAP messages, such as space time coding information, ranging region information, and fast feedback ranging definitions, is not necessarily dynamic and therefore could be sent less frequently to reduce overhead. Some of the information provided in the uplink and downlink channels is static, and thus either does not need to be periodically broadcast by the base stations 14 to the mobile stations 16 that have already entered the network, or could be broadcast at much reduced rates. Such static information may include base station identifiers, operator identifiers, subnet identifiers, and time division duplex ratios.

Some of the information provided in the uplink and downlink channels is semi-static, and thus either does not need to be periodically broadcast by the base stations 14 to the mobile stations 16 if the information has not changed, could be broadcast at much reduced rates, or could be broadcast when the information changes. Such information may include burst profiles and handover parameters. Similarly, information for neighboring base stations is generally semi-static and does not need to be periodically broadcast to the mobile stations 16 that have already entered the network, assuming the information has not changed. From the above, one can see that the need to provide or update control information varies. While some control information is constantly changing, other control information may only change periodically, if at all.

As an example, control information can be categorized as being relatively static, semi-static, or dynamic. Static control information is relatively fixed. Semi-static control information will change on a periodic basis or in response to a defined event. Dynamic control information is information that may change on a relatively continuous basis.

Regardless of being static, semi-static, or dynamic, control information is typically delivered at defined locations in a framing structure wherein certain information is provided somewhere in a frame or group of frames each time the frame or group of frames is transmitted. While continuously providing dynamic control information may be necessary, continuously retransmitting static and semi-static control information that has not changed since the last transmission is very inefficient from both a processing and resource perspective.

With the present invention different types of control information may be sent at different times to increase efficiency. For example, control signaling overhead may be reduced by having the base station 14 transmit static system-wide information that provides essential physical layer configuration information that is needed by a mobile station 16 to perform initial system access procedures in response to the base station 14 detecting that the mobile station 16 is attempting to enter the network. This is in contrast to having the base station 14 transmitting such information in each frame or sub-frame regardless of network events or conditions. The physical layer configuration information is used by the mobile station 16 to establish communications with the base station 14 for network entry to the network supported by the base station 14. The base station 14 can transmit static system-wide information that provides machine access code (MAC) or other upper layer configuration information after the mobile station 16 performs initial system access using the physical layer configuration information. The upper layer configuration information is not needed for initial system access and can be unicast to the appropriate mobile station 16 to further increase overall system efficiency.

In the above scenario, the base station 14 may broadcast uplink ranging (or random access) information for the mobile station 16 that is entering the network to use when initiating uplink ranging (or random access) procedures. The mobile terminal 16 that is entering the network will receive the uplink ranging (or random access) information and use it to initiate the uplink ranging procedures required to gain entry to the network, wherein the procedures entail uplink transmission based on the uplink ranging or random access information as is known in the art.

In the IEEE 802.16m standard, the framing structure is as follows. A superframe includes four frames and is transmitted every 20 milliseconds. Each frame has eight sub-frames and is transmitted every five milliseconds. Each sub-frame generally corresponds to five, six, or seven OFDM symbols.

What follows provides a breakdown of different types of control information into seven different categories and an exemplary way of controlling the dissemination of the control information based on the corresponding categories. Delivery of the various types of control information may be based on appropriate events, conditions, or scheduling criteria. For the following example, the IEEE 802.16m framing structure is used; however, those skilled in the art will recognize the applicability of these concepts to different types of framing structures.

Type 1 control information is considered static and corresponds to essential system-wide physical layer information that is used by the mobile station 16 for decoding downlink physical layer frames/sub-frames that are received from the base station 14. Exemplary control information includes bandwidth configuration information, CP sizes, multi-carrier configuration information, system time, time division duplex (TDD) ratio information, guard tones, and the like. Type 1 control information generally includes static system-wide deployment specific parameters, which are required for fast initial access during network entry. Mobile stations 16 should be able to decode the type 1 information after synchronization with the serving base station or base stations 14. The type 1 control information should be delivered with very high reliability, and can be broadcast either periodically or in association with an initial ranging event. If broadcast periodically, the information should be carried in a fixed resource location within a superframe. If broadcast in association with an initial ranging event, the presence or absence of the control information is signaled by a broadcast pointer channel (BPCH), which will be described in further detail below.

Type 2 control information is considered pseudo-dynamic (or aggressively semi-static) and may change from one superframe to another, but may not change from one sub-frame to another or even be provided in any or sub-frame of a superframe. The Type 2 information corresponds to essential sector-wide physical layer information that is used by the mobile station 16 for decoding downlink physical layer frames/sub-frames. Type 2 information may include channelization information, legacy and 802.16m resource partitioning information, sub-frame control configuration information, superframe configuration control information, and the like. The channelization information may relate to the partitioning of diversity zones, localized zone and information, pilot structure and information, and the like. The type 2 information may also contain initial ranging region or code information that allows the mobile stations 16 to facilitate fast initial access procedures as set forth in the IEEE 802.16 standards. Since the type 2 control information is generally required for fast initial access during network entry and handover, the mobile station 16 should be able to decode this information after synchronization and receipt of the type 1 information. As indicated, the type 1 information may likely change from one superframe to another, and as such, should be broadcast periodically every superframe in a fixed resource location within a superframe or at the boundaries of superframes, wherein the fixed resource location is known by the mobile stations 16. Like the type 1 information, the type 2 information should be delivered with very high reliability.

Type 3 control information is considered static and corresponds to non-physical layer system information, such as base station identifiers, operator identifiers, subnet identifiers, and the like. This control information does not have to be periodically broadcast to the mobile stations 16 and can be unicast to the mobile stations 16 during initial network entry procedures. Further, this information does not have to be provided in a fixed resource location in a superframe, frame, or sub-frame.

Type 4 control information is semi-static physical layer or MAC layer configuration information such as handover parameters, power control parameters, fast feedback region information, ranging region information, and the like. The type 4 control information can change in a relatively slow fashion in the order of seconds, minutes, or hours as opposed to the dynamic control information that may be changing and need updating in periods of less than 100 milliseconds. For mobile stations 16 that are already entered in the network, there is no need to broadcast the type 4 information in a frequent manner, assuming the information has not changed. The design of the control channel should support efficient power saving for sleep and idle modes for the mobile station 16 while ensuring any changes in the system configuration are received by the mobile station 16 in a timely fashion. For mobile stations 16 that are performing initial network entry, the type 4 information may be sent as a unicast message to each mobile station 16 during network entry to expedite network entry, after the base station 14 has already completed the initial ranging procedures with the particular mobile station 16.

Type 5 control information relates to information of or related to neighboring base stations 14 with respect to the serving base station 14. The type 5 information may include static information corresponding to the type 3 information or semi-static information corresponding to the type 4 information. The type 5 control information may be broadcast periodically or in response to an event. The type 5 control information could also be unicast to any mobile station 16 that wants to add a neighboring base station 14 to an active set of base stations 14 that are currently serving the mobile station 16.

Type 6 control information is paging information that is semi-static and can be event driven. Whether quick paging or regular paging information, Type 6 control information is generally not periodic and should be broadcast whenever there are one or more mobile stations 16 to page, generally in association with at least one mobile station 16 entering the network.

Type 7 control information is dynamic and relates to downlink and uplink resource allocation and traffic burst assignment information, such as MCS, multiple-input multiple output (MIMO) mode, user identifier, resource allocation and the like. The type 7 control information may also encompass acknowledgements (ACKs) and negative acknowledgments (NAKs) of uplink traffic as well as power control information for uplink traffic. The type 7 control information may change every sub-frame and be unicast to a mobile station 16 if the traffic burst is unicast or multicast/broadcast to a group of mobile stations 16 if the traffic bust is multicast/broadcast. The resource location information for one or more mobile stations 16 being served by the base station 14 may be multicast to the group of mobile stations 16.

To effectively and efficiently provide control information, a broadcast pointer channel (BPCH) is used to identify the type and perhaps relative location of control information that is being provided in a given frame structure, such as a sub-frame, frame, or superframe. In operation, the base station 14 will identify the control information to provide in each sub-frame, generate the sub-frames, and transmit the sub-frames in a sequential fashion. For example, assume that control information corresponding to any one or more control information types 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6 may be present in a sub-frame or superframe boundary in an IEEE 802.16m frame structure. As such, type 3 and 4 control information may be provided in a first sub-frame while type 1 control information may be provided in a subsequent sub-frame, which may not include the type 3 and 4 control information. In one configuration, type 2 and 7 information is not identified by the BPCH.

A sub-frame (or like framing entity, such a frame or superframe) may have a BPCH and a corresponding system control information segment in which control information may reside. As described above, not every sub-frame needs have a BPCH and the control information provided in the system control information segment may vary. The system control information segment may have any number of control information blocks, wherein each control information block that is present may correspond to a particular type of control information. The BPCH is used to identify the type of control information that is present in a corresponding system control information segment, and if needed or desired, the relative locations of the different control information. For example, the BPCH may include presence flags for the different types of control information wherein the presence flags are set according to the presence or absence of corresponding control information in the system control information segment. If the control information segment for a frame includes type 3, 4, and 5 control information in corresponding control information blocks, the BPCH may have flags that correspond to type 3, 4, and 5 control information set to indicate the presence of such information while other flags that correspond to other types of control information are set to indicate the absence of other information types. The BPCH may also provide the location, length, or the like of the corresponding control information blocks within the system control information segment, such that the mobile station 16 can determine the precise location of the control information in the system control information segment. Each control information block may correspond to a different type of control information or a group of control information types.

With this configuration, mobile stations 16 can quickly and efficiently determine what control information is present in a sub-frame, whether the control information that is present is relevant, as well as the location of any or all of the control information in the sub-frame. As such, the mobile station 16 can avoid decoding control information that is not relevant. In practice, this means that the mobile station 16 can quickly assess the need to decode the remainder of a sub-frame or at least the portion of the sub-frame that relates to control information once it has determined whether the sub-frame contains relevant control information.

The ability to efficiently determine if relevant control information is present and relevant in a sub-frame is particularly beneficial when the mobile station 16 is not active and resides in a sleep or idle mode. This may be accomplished by monitoring the BPCH. In these modes, the mobile station 16 is not actively engage in supporting voice, data, or media communications, but will periodically wake to obtain or check for relevant control information. If the BPCH in a sub-frame that is being monitored indicates that no control information is present or control information is present, but not relevant to that particular mobile station 16, the mobile station 16 can quickly return to the sleep or idle mode without the need to decode the rest of the sub-frame, including any control information that is present but not relevant as well as any resource and allocation information (type 7) that may be provided in other portions of the sub-frame. The sooner the mobile station 16 can return to the sleep or idle modes, the more power is conserved.

When the BPCH in a sub-frame indicates that the control information is present and the mobile station 16 determines that the control information that is present is relevant to that mobile station 16, the mobile station 16 can decode the control information. In certain configurations, the mobile station 16 can selectively decode only that control information that is relevant, such that when a system control information segment has both relevant and irrelevant control information, the mobile station 16 can decode the relevant control information without decoding the irrelevant control information as well as any resource and allocation information (type 7) that may be provided in other portions of the sub-frame. By eliminating the need to decode irrelevant control information, the mobile station 16 can further save power. Again when different types of control information are present, whether in allocated control information blocks or otherwise, the BPCH may provide sufficient information to let the mobile station 16 determine the location of the relevant control information so as to avoid the need to decode the irrelevant control information. As such, the mobile station 16 can selectively decode all or a portion of any control information that is present in a sub-frame based on the BPCH. Importantly, not all sub-frames need to have control information at all in the system control information segment, let alone control information of a particular type.

As with control information, a BPCH may or may not be present in each sub-frame. The following examples illustrate two configurations for detecting the present of a BPCH. For the first configuration, reference is made to FIGS. 4A and 4B. In this configuration, the sub-frame includes a control segment, an optional BPCH segment, an optional system control information segment, and a traffic segment for traffic bursts. The control segment may contain information related to the partitioning of resources within the sub-frame for traffic bursts. The control segment may be of fixed length and location, which are known to the mobile station 16. The control segment is encoded and modulated in a known fashion. The traffic segment carries information defining allocation of resources for traffic bursts.

A BPCH presence flag is added to the control segment of the sub-frame to indicate the presence or absence of the BPCH and perhaps the type and location of control information, if any, that follows in the system control information segment. When present, the BPCH may be of fixed length and location, which are known to the mobile station 16. The BPCH may also be encoded and modulated in a known fashion. In operation, the mobile station 16 will process a sub-frame as follows. First, the mobile station 16 will decode the control segment and analyze the BPCH presence flag to determine whether the sub-frame includes a BPCH. If the BPCH presence flag (1) indicates that a BPCH is present in the sub-frame as in FIG. 4A, the mobile station 16 will decode and process the BPCH such that all control information or any relevant control information in the system control information segment can be decoded. Any relevant control information is then used by the mobile station 16 as desired. The remaining resources in the traffic segment are for traffic bursts and are partitioned based on information in the control segment. The mobile station 16 will handle the traffic bursts in traditional fashion in light of the control segment information.

If the presence flag (0) indicates that a BPCH is not present in the sub-frame as in FIG. 4B, the mobile station 16 will recognize that the BPCH and the associated system control information segment are not present in the sub-frame. The remaining resources in the traffic segment are for traffic bursts and are partitioned based on information in the control segment. The mobile station 16 will handle the traffic bursts in traditional fashion in light of the control segment information.

In the above configuration, a BPCH presence flag is provided in the control segment to indicate whether a BPCH, and thus a system control information segment, is present in the sub-frame. In the configuration of FIGS. 5A and 5B, no BPCH presence flag is employed. If the BPCH is present, it will be provided in a fixed location in the sub-frame and will have a fixed length as well as being provided with a fixed modulation and coding scheme (FIG. 5A). In operation, the mobile station 16 will first attempt to decode a BPCH at the location in the sub-frame where it expects to find the BPCH. If decoding is successful, the information provided in the BPCH will allow the mobile station 16 to identify and decode all or the relevant control information that is provided in the system control information segment, as described above. If the decoding is not successful, the mobile station 16 will determine that the BPCH is not present, and as such, there is no control information provided in the control segment (FIG. 5B). The mobile station 16 will then proceed to decode the control segment and the traffic bursts that are provided in the traffic segment of the sub-frame.

With semi-static control information, such as information types 4 and 5 as well as perhaps type 2, the base station 14 may take steps to inform the mobile stations 16 as to when the control information changes to enable further power savings by avoiding the need for the mobile stations to decode control information that has not been changed or updated. Control information, version information, and an action time for the control information may be sent from the base station 14 to the mobile stations 16 at the same or different times in the same or different messages. As the control information is updated, a new version number is assigned to the control information such that each version of the control information can be identified and tracked. The version number is referred to herein as a system configuration change count (SCCC). The action time identifies when the configuration information should take effect or be in effect. In general, the control information is downloaded by the mobile station 16 and implemented at the action time. Until the action time, the mobile station 16 will use the prior version of the control information.

In one configuration, the mobile station 16 may store current control information that is currently in effect as well as new control information in the memory 44 of the control system 32 that will take effect in the future at the designated action time. As shown in FIG. 3, the current control information (CI (A)) has a first SCCC (SCCC (A)) while the new control information (CI (B)) has a second SCCC (SCCC (B)), which is different from the first SCCC. Periodically and in a frequent manner, the base station 14 may send the current SCCC to identify the current control information that is in effect as well as a system configuration change alert (SCCA) flag to indicate whether new control information (that is different from the current control information) is being provided by the base station 14. Again, the new control information is generally control information that is scheduled to take place in the future. For example, the SCCC and the SCCA flag may be provided every superframe in the corresponding superframe configuration control (type 2) information.

By detecting the current SCCC value being provided by the base station 14, the mobile station 16 is aware of the current control information that should be in effect and in current use. Assuming the mobile station 16 has received and stored the current control information, the mobile station 16 will use the current control information until new control information is downloaded and the action time for switching to the new control information occurs. When the action time occurs, the new control information will become the current control information. If the mobile station 16 detects an SCCC value being provided by the base station 14 that corresponds to control information that is different from that being used, the mobile station 16 will either switch to the appropriate control information, if such control information is available in the memory 44, or cease uplink transmissions to the base station 14 and attempt to decode the appropriate control information from the downlink transmissions from the base station 14. Once the appropriate control information is recovered, the mobile station 16 will resume uplink transmissions to the base station 14.

By monitoring the SCCA flag, the mobile station 16 can determine whether the base station 14 is broadcasting new control information that will ultimately be used in place of the current control information. If the SCCA flag indicates the new control information is being broadcast, the mobile station 16 will try to decode the broadcast messages in the current and subsequent sub-frames that include the control information of interest until the new control information is successfully decoded and stored in the memory 44.

When operating in an active, or normal, mode, the mobile station 16 may operate as follows to support power saving efforts. The following operation assumes that the mobile station 16 is using the current control information, which corresponds to the current SCCC that is currently being provided by the base station 14. If the SCCA flag indicates that no new control information is being broadcast, the mobile station 16 does not need to decode the corresponding control information that is being provided by the base station 14. If the SCCA flag indicates that new control information is being broadcast AND if the mobile station 16 has previously successfully decoded the new control information that is associated with the new SCCC, the mobile station 16 does not need to decode the new control information that is being provided by the base station 14. As such, certain sub-frames or portions thereof that include the new control information need not be decoded. If the SCCA flag indicates that new control information is being broadcast AND if the mobile station 16 has not previously successfully decoded the new control information that is associated with the new SCCC, the mobile station 16 should decode the new control information that is being provided by the base station 14. Such decoding may entail decoding the BPCH to determine the presence and location of the desired control information in the system control information segment. As such, certain sub-frames or portions thereof that provide the new control information should be decoded.

When operating in a sleep or idle mode, the mobile station 16 may operate as follows to support power saving efforts. The base station 14 will periodically transmit control information. The mobile station 16 will wake up periodically, with the period set by the base station 14, to attempt to decode the current SCCC and the SCCA flag being sent in the corresponding control information. Preferably, the wake up times will coincide with the time when the SCCC and the SCCA flag is being broadcast by the base station 14.

If the mobile station 16 detects that the SCCC being broadcast is different from the SCCC for the control information that the mobile station 16 has stored, the mobile station 16 should wake up during the current sub-frame and stay awake during subsequent sub-frames to obtain the current control information that corresponds to the SCCC being broadcast by the base station 14. Such decoding may entail decoding the BPCH to determine the presence and location of the desired control information in the system control information segment. Once the current control information is obtained, the mobile station 16 will implement the current control information and either begin uplink transmissions or return to the sleep or idle mode.

Assuming that the mobile station 16 has and is using the current control information based on the SCCC being broadcast by the base station 14, the following operation may be provided to enhance power saving during sleep or idle modes. If the SCCA flag indicates that new control information is being broadcast AND if the mobile station 16 has not previously successfully decoded the new control information that are associated with the new SCCC, the mobile station 16 can awake during the current sub-frame and stay awake until it has decoded the new control information that is being provided by the base station 14. Again, such decoding may entail decoding the BPCH to determine the presence and location of the desired control information in the system control information segment. If the SCCA flag indicates that no new control information is being broadcast, the mobile station 16 does not need to decode the corresponding control information that is being provided by the base station 14 and can return to the sleep or idle mode, assuming the mobile station 16 is within a normal sleep window or paging unavailable window, without decoding the subsequent sub-frames.

From the above, control information may be categorized and delivered at different times depending on the characteristics of the control information, the operating mode of the mobile station 16, and the like. The following provides a couple of examples for allowing a mobile station 16 to gain entry to the network, and thus a particular base station 14 to initiate traffic communications. The exemplary categories described above are used. For the first example, assume that the substantially static type 1 information, which is defined as essential system-wide physical layer information for decoding downlink physical layer frames or sub-frames, is broadcast in response to an initial ranging event that is triggered by actions to initiate communications by a mobile station 16 that is in range of the base station 14. Further assume that the presence or absence of type 1, 3, and 4 control information is signaled by the BPCH and provided in the system control information segment as described above. The type 2 information may be broadcast in a fixed location every superframe.

Initially, the mobile station 16 will synchronize with the synchronization channel or preamble that is being provided by the base station 14. The mobile station 16 will decode available type 2 control information and obtain the relevant ranging region information. The ranging region information is provided as control information by the base station 14 and must be used by the mobile station 16 when performing uplink ranging procedures. Accordingly, the mobile station 16 will use the ranging region information to perform the uplink ranging procedures. The base station 14 will detect the uplink ranging attempts being made by the mobile station 16 and will transmit the type 1 control information. The mobile station 16 will decode the type 1 control information. The mobile station 16 will continue its ranging procedures, and then obtain any available type 3 and type 4 control information, which may be unicast by the base station 14 to the mobile station 16. The type 3 and type 4 control information may be transmitted on the downlink physical layer frames that are being provided to the mobile station 16.

For the second example, assume that the substantially static type 1 information is periodically broadcast to mobile stations 16 that are in range of the base station 14. Further assume that the type 1 control information is provided in a fixed resource location within a superframe and that the use of a BPCH is not necessary for the type 1 control information. The BPCH may be used for the type 3 and 4 control information. The type 2 information may be broadcast in a fixed location every superframe.

Initially, the mobile station 16 will synchronize with the synchronization channel and preamble information being provided by the base station 14. Once synchronized, the mobile station 16 will decode the type 1 information from the fixed resource locations of a particular superframe, and then decode the type 2 control information, preferably using the BPCH. If the BPCH is used, the mobile station 16 will identify the location of the type 2 control information in the system control information segment of a sub-frame based on the BPCH, and then decode the type 2 control information accordingly. The mobile station 16 may then perform any uplink ranging procedures based on the ranging information provided in the type 2 control information. Once the uplink ranging is complete, the mobile station 16 may obtain the type 3 and type 4 control information that is being unicast from the base station 14 in downlink physical layer sub-frames. Again, the type 3 and type 4 control information may be obtained through the use of the BPCH as described above.

Certain concepts of the above configurations may be employed in a multi-carrier environment. Multi-carrier environments are those that allow mobile stations 16 to simultaneously receive information that is transmitted on two or more different carriers. For example, a 10 MHz spectrum can be divided into two 5 MHz carriers in order to simultaneously support mobile stations 16 with 5 MHz bandwidth capability, as well as those with 10 MHz bandwidth capability. Mobile stations 16 that have a multi-carrier mode are able to receive information simultaneously on both the 5 MHz carrier and the 10 MHz carrier. Not all of the carriers need to redundantly carry control information. For example, system-wide and sector-wide system information is common to all carriers. As such, there is no need to transmit the base station ID on all carriers, as the base station ID will stay the same regardless of the carrier or carriers being used. Repeating the control information over multiple carriers merely increases overhead. Accordingly, at least two carrier types may be defined: a primary carrier and a secondary carrier. A primary carrier may carry the synchronization channel (or preamble), all of the system information, neighboring base station information, paging information, and resource allocation and control information, which generally correspond to all of the categories of control information described above. As such, the primary carrier may be used to carry type 1 through type 7 control information. The secondary carrier may only carry a subset of the system information, such as the type 2 control information, which is related to superframe configuration on the secondary carrier, as well as the resource allocation and control information of each sub-frame within that carrier, such as the type 7 information. This type of carrier may also carry the synchronization channel (or preamble) information. Regardless of the configuration, the different primary and secondary carriers need not carry the same control information.

In general, one or more carriers within the spectrum can be designated as primary carriers, while one or more carriers within the spectrum may be designated as secondary carriers. Mobile stations 16 that only have the capability to transmit and receive on a single carrier at a time are assigned to the primary carrier. Wideband mobile stations 16 that are capable of transmitting and receiving on multiple carriers at a time are assigned to one or more primary carriers as well as one or more secondary carriers. Based on the allocations described above, the base stations 14 may provide system broadcast information, such as type 1 through type 6 control information and resource allocation and control information, such as the type 7 control information, over the primary carriers. Superframe configuration information, such as the type 2 control information, may be transmitted at a superframe boundary over the secondary carriers. Accordingly, the wideband mobile stations 16 will monitor the assigned primary carriers for the system control information, as well as the resource allocation and control information, and monitor the secondary carriers for the superframe configuration.

Channel information, such as channel quality information (CQI) of one or multiple carriers may be fed back over either one of the carriers, depending on how the base station 14 has instructed the mobile station 16. When configured to feed back the CQI of a secondary carrier, the mobile station 16 has to measure the channel qualities associated with the respective carriers. For example, the CQI of the primary carrier should be quantified based on the preamble or pilot symbols received via the primary carrier, whereas the CQI of the secondary carrier should be measured based on the preamble or pilot symbols received via the secondary carrier.

Those skilled in the art will recognize improvements and modifications to the embodiments of the present invention. All such improvements and modifications are considered within the scope of the concepts disclosed herein and the claims that follow. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method for operating a mobile station within a network, comprising: attempting to enter the network via a base station; and receiving broadcast, system-wide, static control information that is used by the mobile stations to facilitate communication with the base station.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the broadcast, system-wide, static control information is essential physical layer information needed by the mobile station for initial system access to facilitate communications with the base station.
 3. The method of claim 2, further comprising: completing initial system access for network entry; and receiving additional static system-wide control information that provides media access control or other upper layer configuration information to the mobile station.
 4. The method of claim 3, wherein the additional static system-wide control information is not needed for initial system access for network entry.
 5. The method of claim 3, wherein the additional static system-wide control information is unicast to the mobile station.
 6. The method of claim 1, further comprising: receiving broadcast, uplink ranging or random access information prior to the mobile station entering the network, wherein the uplink ranging or random access information is used by the mobile station to initiate uplink ranging or random access procedures.
 7. A mobile station within a network, comprising: a receiver, transmitter, and baseband processor for facilitating wireless communication; and a control system associated with the receiver, the transmitter and the baseband processor, the control system adapted to: attempt to enter the network via a base station; and receive broadcast, system-wide, static control information that is used by the mobile stations to facilitate communication with the base station.
 8. The mobile station of claim 7, wherein the broadcast, system-wide, static control information is essential physical layer information needed by the mobile station for initial system access to facilitate communications with the base station.
 9. The mobile station of claim 8, wherein the control system further adapted to: complete initial system access for network entry; and receive additional static system-wide control information that provides media access control or other upper layer configuration information to the mobile station.
 10. The mobile station of claim 9, wherein the additional static system-wide control information is not needed for initial system access for network entry.
 11. The mobile station of claim 9, wherein the additional static system-wide control information is unicast to the mobile station.
 12. The mobile station of claim 7, wherein the control system further adapted to: receive broadcast, uplink ranging or random access information prior to the mobile station entering the network, wherein the uplink ranging or random access information is used by the mobile station to initiate uplink ranging or random access procedures.
 13. A method for operating a mobile station within a network, comprising: attempting to enter the network via a base station; and receiving broadcast, system-wide, static control information that is used by the mobile stations to facilitate communication with the base station.
 14. The method of claim 13, wherein the broadcast, system-wide, static control information is essential physical layer information needed by the mobile station for initial system access to facilitate communications with the base station.
 15. The method of claim 14, further comprising: completing initial system access for network entry; and receiving additional static system-wide control information that provides media access control or other upper layer configuration information to the mobile station.
 16. The method of claim 15, wherein the additional static system-wide control information is not needed for initial system access for network entry.
 17. The method of claim 15, wherein the additional static system-wide control information is unicast to the mobile station.
 18. The method of claim 13, further comprising: receiving broadcast, uplink ranging or random access information prior to the mobile station entering the network, wherein the uplink ranging or random access information is used by the mobile station to initiate uplink ranging or random access procedures. 